View Single Post
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
______? ______? is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 9
Default Sure could use some ideas....

On Fri, 25 Aug 2006 14:45:56 -0500, JustinW broke out their crayolas and
scribbled:

Hi All,

I'm rehabbing a building that is 40-50 years old. While mowing the tall
grass, I ran over a outside faucet and destroyed it. I dug up the line
and intended to plug it. It was half inch galvanized pipe. It was
originally assembled with some type of thread-sealing pipe dope that has
long ago turned rock hard.

What I tried to remove the first connection, I put a cheater bar over a
pipe wrench and tried to unscrew the damaged fitting. The pipe was
weakened by corrosion and it just crushed. I went up the water line and
broke several other fittings.

I'm now working under the house in a tough environment -- very little
crawlspace, sloping ground and a few other things. I'm trying to remove a
half inch reducer screwed into a three quarter galvanized T. It's the last
fitting before I encounter serious expense doing some wholesale repiping.

So far, I've used a propane torch on the galvanized T while periodically
dousing the reducer with water. I've also used about 5,000 gallons of
penetrating oil. I don't have room for a cheater (good thing huh?) and so
far I can't budge the reducer with two-foot pipe wrenches.

Any thoughts or ideas would be seriously appreciated.


Justin


Get one of these, a compressor and pneumatic impact wrench. You may be
able to rent the compressor & impact wrench at a local rental store. You
need to hold pressure on the scocket while loosening. Don't get too
aggressive at first. The vibration helps to loosen it.

http://www0.epinions.com/General_Too...D_Shop_Too ls

One of the "big box" stores may have these in stock.